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Posted to dev@lucene.apache.org by "David Smiley (JIRA)" <ji...@apache.org> on 2019/07/26 14:14:00 UTC

[jira] [Commented] (LUCENE-8776) Start offset going backwards has a legitimate purpose

    [ https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/LUCENE-8776?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:comment-tabpanel&focusedCommentId=16893852#comment-16893852 ] 

David Smiley commented on LUCENE-8776:
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[~venkat11] I am curious if you've tried the latest version of the UnifiedHighlighter that can be configured to use the "WeightMatches" API.  This is toggled via the {{org.apache.lucene.search.uhighlight.UnifiedHighlighter.HighlightFlag#WEIGHT_MATCHES}} flag.  This isn't the default at the Lucene level but ought to be changed to be.  You may notice some highlighting differences, like for phrases and spans in which phrases as a whole get one pair of open/close tags instead of the constituent words.  There's a chance that this mode ameliorates your highlighting woes with offsets.

> Start offset going backwards has a legitimate purpose
> -----------------------------------------------------
>
>                 Key: LUCENE-8776
>                 URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/LUCENE-8776
>             Project: Lucene - Core
>          Issue Type: Bug
>          Components: core/search
>    Affects Versions: 7.6
>            Reporter: Ram Venkat
>            Priority: Major
>
> Here is the use case where startOffset can go backwards:
> Say there is a line "Organic light-emitting-diode glows", and I want to run span queries and highlight them properly. 
> During index time, light-emitting-diode is split into three words, which allows me to search for 'light', 'emitting' and 'diode' individually. The three words occupy adjacent positions in the index, as 'light' adjacent to 'emitting' and 'light' at a distance of two words from 'diode' need to match this word. So, the order of words after splitting are: Organic, light, emitting, diode, glows. 
> But, I also want to search for 'organic' being adjacent to 'light-emitting-diode' or 'light-emitting-diode' being adjacent to 'glows'. 
> The way I solved this was to also generate 'light-emitting-diode' at two positions: (a) In the same position as 'light' and (b) in the same position as 'glows', like below:
> ||organic||light||emitting||diode||glows||
> | |light-emitting-diode| |light-emitting-diode| |
> |0|1|2|3|4|
> The positions of the two 'light-emitting-diode' are 1 and 3, but the offsets are obviously the same. This works beautifully in Lucene 5.x in both searching and highlighting with span queries. 
> But when I try this in Lucene 7.6, it hits the condition "Offsets must not go backwards" at DefaultIndexingChain:818. This IllegalArgumentException is being thrown without any comments on why this check is needed. As I explained above, startOffset going backwards is perfectly valid, to deal with word splitting and span operations on these specialized use cases. On the other hand, it is not clear what value is added by this check and which highlighter code is affected by offsets going backwards. This same check is done at BaseTokenStreamTestCase:245. 
> I see others talk about how this check found bugs in WordDelimiter etc. but it also prevents legitimate use cases. Can this check be removed?  



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